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#1
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Free will is an illusion in my opinion. Here's why:
1. In order to have free will, there has to exist a "self" that is seperate and free from the laws of the rest of the universe. There is no such "self", there is only cells and molecules, and a bunch of nuerons that think like a computer and generate the illusion of self--we humans obey the laws of the universe just like everything else. To say that we humans have a "self" would be to say that so do dogs, ants, bacteria, self replicating molecules, and matter. If all those things have a "self" then the word loses its initial meaning and it has no bearing on free will any more. 2. Our will is not free. Every time you make a decision, it's because you're brain weighs your desires and comes up with the best solution (to the best of your brain's limited ability) to acheive these wants. The computation is not "free will" because it is dependent on the information your brain is given, its reasoning abilities and the brain's biochemical state--none of which you have any control over (besides, even non-living calculators do computing). And the desires themselves are not free will, because we cannot choose what to desire. So for example, my brain can compute the best way to get food without spending a lot of money, but I can't choose to WANT or NOT WANT to eat and not spend a lot of money in the first place.....that desire has been programmed into me beforehand. I want to eat, and there's nothing I can do about it. The more I observe human and animal behavior, and how predictable and patterned it is (though complex) the more I realize that we do not have "free will" any more than animals do. And animals no more have "free will" than do lower organisms, self-replicating molecules, and matter. Here's another way to think about it: when you make a decision, you either A) logically weigh your wants and come up with the best decision or B) flip a coin and choose at random. If you choose by the B) method, that's not free will, because you're not choosing...you're just behaving in a random sporadic manner in which random chance dictates what you decide. And hypothetical "self" isn't even involved in the decision making process...it's all up to a coin. If you make a choice by method A), then you're decision is controlled by your brain's intelligence (it's ability to reason etc) and by what your wants are, NEITHER of which you have control over! Remember....I'm not saying free will doesn't exist, I'm saying it's an illusion. I never said people feel forced to do anything....they obey the laws of nature "will"ingly. (haha)
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#2
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Free will is an illusion in my opinion. Here's why:
1. In order to have free will, there has to exist a "self" that is seperate and free from the laws of the rest of the universe. There is no such "self", there is only cells and molecules, and a bunch of nuerons that think like a computer and generate the illusion of self--we humans obey the laws of the universe just like everything else. To say that we humans have a "self" would be to say that so do dogs, ants, bacteria, self replicating molecules, and matter. If all those things have a "self" then the word loses its initial meaning and it has no bearing on free will any more. 2. Our will is not free. Every time you make a decision, it's because you're brain weighs your desires and comes up with the best solution (to the best of your brain's limited ability) to acheive these wants. The computation is not "free will" because it is dependent on the information your brain is given, its reasoning abilities and the brain's biochemical state--none of which you have any control over (besides, even non-living calculators do computing). And the desires themselves are not free will, because we cannot choose what to desire. So for example, my brain can compute the best way to get food without spending a lot of money, but I can't choose to WANT or NOT WANT to eat and not spend a lot of money in the first place.....that desire has been programmed into me beforehand. I want to eat, and there's nothing I can do about it. The more I observe human and animal behavior, and how predictable and patterned it is (though complex) the more I realize that we do not have "free will" any more than animals do. And animals no more have "free will" than do lower organisms, self-replicating molecules, and matter. Here's another way to think about it: when you make a decision, you either A) logically weigh your wants and come up with the best decision or B) flip a coin and choose at random. If you choose by the B) method, that's not free will, because you're not choosing...you're just behaving in a random sporadic manner in which random chance dictates what you decide. And hypothetical "self" isn't even involved in the decision making process...it's all up to a coin. If you make a choice by method A), then you're decision is controlled by your brain's intelligence (it's ability to reason etc) and by what your wants are, NEITHER of which you have control over! Remember....I'm not saying free will doesn't exist, I'm saying it's an illusion. I never said people feel forced to do anything....they obey the laws of nature "will"ingly. (haha)
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#3
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I think I agree - but you say that free will both exists but is also an illusion, and you say that humans have no more free will than animals, and these statements don't make much sense. The difference between humans and animals, and the reason why we have a concept called free will at all, is because we don't just blindly follow our desires, but have the ability to imagine ourselves making other choices. An animal will use instinct and experience to create in any circumstance a kind of priority of desires, and act accordingly; for us, it's a lot more complicated because we have the ability of abstract thought, allowing us to imagine ourselves making different choices, without knowing the consequences of those actions. We make one choice, experience the consequences, and imagine what would have happened had we acted differently. Those choices are still based on desires that we don't have control over, however we have so many desires that so often conflict with each other that we need to rely on other criteria to make up our minds.
If I am aware of muliple choices in a given situation, and acknowledge that I am free to choose between them, and know that all of the actions by themselves could satisfy at least some of my desires, but may also have desirable or undesirable consequences of which I am currently unaware, I won't just feel my way, or flip a coin. Then my personality kicks it, along with the memes I currently possess; perhaps I am risk-averse, and decide to investigate further before I make up my mind; perhaps I have the idea lodged in my head that I have the ultimate responsibility for my actions, and so cannot in good conscience act without knowing more. These can of course be compared to primal urges, but I still think it makes a big difference that we are aware of ourselves making the choices, since we then behave differently than we would otherwise have done. And it also seems to follow that some people have more free will than others - as we experience and learn, and acquire memes that affect our decision-making processes, we gain more freedom. Desires and impulsive acts become less important, and the 'ideal you' starts to take over. So 'free will' does exist in a sense that at least makes it a useful term, even if it was all determined by the laws of cause and effect from the very start. This is also why I think that we can actually have free will even if there existed an omniscient God, because free will and predetermination aren't necessarily in conflict if you think of it this way. Free will isn't then about power, it's about identity. And kudos to anyone if they understand this! :mrgreen: |
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#4
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Well saying we have no self really made me think.
B/c you would think if we are all made out of the same things they everything including bacteria and molecules would have a self, but you are forgetting the brain and nervous system. And we make those decisions yes but it has nothing to do with the best system. Some people can look at their pay check and say umm I can pay my bills (which you should do) or nah I'm going to go out and blow it on alchohol, drugs, casino (whatever is not good) and they sometimes do, thus showing their will to do whatever they choose. If we take the definition of self also: The total, essential, or particular being of a person; the individual: “An actor's instrument is the self” (Joan Juliet Buck). The essential qualities distinguishing one person from another; individuality: “He would walk a little first along the southern walls, shed his European self, fully enter this world” (Howard Kaplan). One's consciousness of one's own being or identity; the ego: “For some of us, the self's natural doubts are given in mesmerizing amplification by way of critics' negative assessments of our writing” (Joyce Carol Oates). One's own interests, welfare, or advantage: thinking of self alone. Immunology. That which the immune system identifies as belonging to the body: tissues no longer recognized as self. Then of course bacteria, molecules have no self b/c they have none of this. Wow my brain is just going rampid right now, let me try and collect my thoughts more b/c its just pouring out and I am all over the place. haha
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"A difference of opinion does not mean a difference of principle." - Thomas Jefferson |
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#5
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Quote:
If you believe an advanced intellect is what constitutes free will and therefore no other life forms have free will, we run into all sorts of problems. For example, chessplaying A.I. can contemplate potential choices and anticipate moves far in advance...does it have free will? And exactly how intelligent does one have to be to have free will, where do you draw the line? At what point in evolution did we cross the barrier from no free will to free will? Do children have free will? There are examples of some animals who are as intelligent as children as old as 7....do those animals have free will? Perhaps super intelligent aliens would say that we don't have free will, because we don't have the mental capacity (as they do) for free will... Quote:
Here's a good analogy I read: if you dropped a rock and it fell to the ground, and the rock could speak, it would tell you it freely chose to fall. It's the same thing with the self/identity. Our feeling of self is an illusion created by our nervous system (and it's probably a beneficial illusion I agree). In fact, if you shut down certain parts of the brain (or just get high) you lose this illusion and feel "at one with the universe" and lose your sense of identity and orientation.
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#6
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No, I agree that you can say that free will exists as an experience, because that's what I mean - animals do not experience that. There is no separation between stimuli and response in animals. I'm still deterministic in the way you mean, but the fact that we are able to reflect on our actions gives ourselves something extra that changes the way we act. Think of the difference the meme 'You have responsibility for your actions' makes on someone. Suddenly, it's not enough just to act according to how you feel or even believe; suddenly you are required to make an effort in understanding the consequences of your actions. As soon as you are aware of this responsibility, you can choose (unless temporarily insane) whether or not to take the time to think about your actions. And therefore, people can be held accountable for their actions. Everyone is different, of course - I'm not under the impression that everyone has an equal possibility to be good - but as long as the meme is able to be understood, their is responsibility, which follows from our experience of free will (experience is, I think, better than 'illusion').
Perhaps we should separate the idea of free will from 'absolute freedom' or such. We have free will in the same way we have a self, and we have love; saying that it's just a peculiar consequence of the way our brains are configured doesn't mean that identity and love and free will suddenly disappear, it just allows us a better understanding of them. |
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#7
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Alaric, if I may contest,
I think the term 'abstract reasoning' which we humans hold so dear, could in fact be a glorified synonym for 'evolved instinct'. I think that most animals have the same components to their brains as humans, some of them just simply not being as well developed (duh!). After all, our brains and thought processes had to have developed along the same rules as the rest of our bodies, by theory of evolution. I only bring this up because I have observed traits in certain animals which suggest deeper thinking. I'm not by any means saying that we humans should be watching our jobs as rulers of the animal kingdom, but we need to acknowledge that there are indeed some smart animals out there, and that as far as animal intelligence in general goes, science really doesn't know a whole lot. (yet) That said, one really needs to analyze their own behavior, and wonder just how much could be explained as instinctual.
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The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance. ~Socrates |
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#8
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Rex,
Quote:
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The only good is knowledge and the only evil is ignorance. ~Socrates |
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#9
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But Ceridwen, have you ever tried to suspend your free will? For example, by just suspending all thought and doing exactly what you think you want at the moment? You can't! To do so would be to suspend all belief in self, and kind of 'merge with the cosmos' and forget all notion of self, because it is exactly the sense of self that makes you feel free. Of course, we are not aware of all the myriad of things that cause us to behave in the way we do, but one of those causes is the 'self', the mind's creation that gives me an identity with past experiences and memories that include something identifiably me behaving a certain way and receiving such-and-such consequences. All this is technically happening without 'me' guiding it, but causes me to stop up and think before acting (usually), and gives me some influence on where I end up. Most animals don't have this at all - they cannot identify themselves in a mirror, for example. Neither can two-year-olds, so they wouldn't have any free will either.
So for example, if I injected a dog with some chemical that screwed with his brain and caused him to feel hungry all of the time, he would just eat himself to death. A human might too, but not unknowingly - they would be able to see the consequences of the sudden unending pangs of hunger, consequences which are hopefully at odds with the ideal 'self' that he had developed, and try to control himself. Whether he does so or not is dependent on many things, but if he possesses the meme 'I have responsibility unto myself', then he will have the option of taking a step back and investigating the consequences of his actions, which are then thrown into the ring will all his other desires, fears, thoughts, experiences etc, and the strongest one at the time wins. |
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#10
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